REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT FUNDRAISER FOR MARTHA'S VINEYARD HOSPITAL
Farm Neck Golf Club
Vineyard Haven, Martha's Vineyard

7:16 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Dr. Sullivan and Mike. I feel
like I was in pretty distinguished company tonight with them up here. I
admire them both very much. Lou Sullivan was an outstanding Secretary
of Health and Human Services, a great advocate in our nation's struggle
against AIDS, and one thing I particularly appreciated, one of the early
strong voices in our efforts to protect our children from the dangers of
teen smoking. And I thank you for all you did there and for what you're
doing here. (Applause.)

I have always admired Mike Wallace. I like him more when he's boring
in on someone besides me. (Laughter.) But I want to tell you that he
made a profoundly moving presentation recently at Tipper Gore's National
Conference on Mental Health, which we helped to put together and which
is something Hillary and I care a lot about. And I think we are moving
to the point in our country where we see mental health problems like
other health problems. And when that day arrives, it will be in no
small measure because Mike Wallace had the courage to speak out about
it. And I thank him for that as well. Thank you. (Applause.)

Now, I want to say again, although Mike already alluded to it, I'm
sorry Hillary is not here, but she is a little under the weather. And I
want her to get well because she has a rigorous schedule ahead of her.
(Laughter.)

I want to thank congressman Delahunt for being here, and the other
elected officials, and all the members of the hospital board and the
people here at Farm Neck who have been so kind to me over the years.

I would like to say a few things in a very straightforward way about
this issue before you tonight. I spent a lot of my life trying to keep
hospitals open that serve small populations. And this hospital is an
interesting situation because, as Dr. Sullivan said, there are 14,000
year-round residents here and then up to ten times that many here on any
given day in the summertime. So, for most of the year it's a small
rural hospital in a county in Massachusetts that doesn't have a
particularly high per capita income, where, according to the information
I've been given, 20 percent of the people have no health insurance. And
then there's the summer and all the rest of us who are reasonably
blessed in life, or we wouldn't be able to come to Martha's Vineyard in
the summertime. (Laughter.) And we all want it to stay open and to do
well.

And most of us when we come here come here because we don't want to
think about anything except maybe walking on the beach or taking a sail
or fighting our limitations out on this golf course, or whatever.
(Laughter.) We don't want to think about anything else -- unless like
Mike, we get kidney stones or something else happens to us. But the
people who run the hospital and the people who work at the hospital,
they have to deal with the economics of modern health care, with the
dilemma of the population base, and with the fact that -- you know,
they're there all the time. They deliver babies; they perform emergency
surgery; they take care of the elderly people year round. They do
things that need doing.

And there's not a person under this tent tonight that might not need
this hospital sometime. Now, the plain fact is that, given the
economics of modern medical care, I know there's -- I don't want to get
into all the things that have been in the paper about this -- I'm not
sure George Soros, Bob Rubin, and Alan Greenspan together could make
this thing pay every month, every year, unless people like you are
willing to help keep it open. (Applause.)

Now, of course, everything should be run as well as possible. But
I'm telling you, I've been dealing with this for 20 years now, and I've
kept some hospitals open when I was a governor of a rural state, and
I've seen some close. I've won some and I've lost some. And let me
just give you a couple of things to think about.

First of all, this hospital serves a county here on Martha's Vineyard
that has 20 percent uninsured. I'll bet you anything -- and I know that
there is a health access coalition working on this, but I'll bet you
anything that there are children on this island who are eligible for the
CHIP program -- the Children's Health Insurance Program -- that was one
of the signal accomplishments of the bipartisan Balanced Budget Act of
1997, which provided funds for up to 5 million of the 10 million
uninsured children in this country to have health insurance -- which
means payments to the hospital when they go there. And so far, even
though the enrollments have really picked up, this is the first full
year when all the states have had the programs in place -- only about
one and a half million of those children have been enrolled, a little
over one and a half million. And I'll bet anything some of them who
haven't are here.

The second thing I'd like to say, I bet a lot of the working families
who are here, who work for very modest wages, especially in the off
season, or the farmers who have very limited incomes, their children,
and maybe even the adults who are working, could be eligible for
Medicaid, depending on what the Massachusetts rules are.

The third thing I would like to suggest is that in Tennessee, the
legislature provided an opportunity for working people who had no health
insurance to actually buy into this Medicaid program. I'm embarrassed
to tell you I don't know what options exist in Massachusetts for that,
but we gave them permission to do it in Tennessee because they devised a
way to show that they could do it on the allocation of federal money
they had, and we could do it here as well if it's not being done.

So we need to look to see what kinds of other ways we can infuse cash
into the situation. But, as Mike said when we started, one of the
things we need to remember is that we all need health care. And when
you show up at the hospital, they don't ask for your party registration.
That's why we're trying so hard to pass the patients' bill of rights
down in Washington. Everybody from the AMA to the nurses groups to
virtually every health provider in the country is for it -- because we
recognize this is something that ought to unite us as a people.

Now, it is a challenge when you have small populations and you want
high quality care and you want it there 24 hours a day, seven days a
week, 52 weeks a year, whether there are 100,000 or 14,000 people here.
But I'd like to say there are a lot of people who aren't here tonight on
this island who make all of our lives better. There are a lot of
wonderful people who live here and work here year round, and who would
never be able, themselves, to afford the kind of vacations that all of
us take every year and take for granted. And they deserve good health
care, too. (Applause.)

So I am very, very grateful to you. If there is anything else I can
do, Dr. Sullivan, and anybody else here on the board, to try to explore
what else we can do to enroll more people in covered programs that we
maybe affect the income stream here, I'd be happy to do it. I will do
what I can to help.

I'm proud of you for being here. But what I'd like to say to you is,
I think you ought to be prepared to come next year, too. (Laughter and
applause.)

You know, folks, I've raised a lot of money in my life, and I'm not
running for anything. So I can spend the rest of my life raising money
for causes like this, which I like very well. (Applause.) But I say
that because, based on 20 years of hard work.

Again, I hope the island and the community and all of you can unite
behind this hospital. But I know -- and I will do everything I can to
help explore what else can be done here. But you need to make a
long-term commitment -- if this community wants this hospital -- that it
is something worth paying for, because you never know when you'll need
it, and you certainly know that good people need it and access it every
single day.